Читать книгу Lost Voices of the Edwardians: 1901–1910 in Their Own Words - Max Arthur, Max Arthur - Страница 146
Reece Elliott
ОглавлениеWe would make dolls from an ordinary clothes peg. When it came to the split in the clothes peg, that was the arms. For the feet it was all wires. There were two parts to the feet and a little bit and the clog, and you had a bit of string on the head. You sat on the edge of the cracket, and you hung the doll over a board and somebody would whistle a tune. It would be ‘Oh Sally does tha like pease pudding?’ and so on. That's what used to go on. Uncle Lance was the best of the lot, he could do owt with it. Get the feet go clack to the tune.